5 research outputs found
Heat induces multiomic and phenotypic stress propagation in zebrafish embryos
Heat alters biology from molecular to ecological levels, but may also have unknown indirect effects. This includes the novel concept that animals exposed to abiotic stress can induce stress in naive receivers. Here, we provide a comprehensive picture of the molecularsignatures of this process, by integrating multiomic and phenotypic data. In individual zebrafish embryos, repeated heat peakselicited both a molecular response and a burst of accelerated growth followed by a growth slowdown in concert with reducedresponses to novel stimuli. Metabolomes of the media of heat treated vs. untreated embryos revealed candidate stress metabolitesincluding sulfur-containing compounds and lipids. These stress metabolites elicited transcriptomic changes in naive receivers related to immune response, extracellular signaling, glycosaminoglycan/keratan sulfate, and lipid metabolism. Consequently, non–heatexposed receivers (exposed to stress metabolites only) experienced accelerated catch-up growth in concert with reduced swimming performance. The combination of heat and stress metabolites accelerated development the most, mediated by apelin signaling. Our results prove the concept of indirect heat-induced stress propagation toward naive receivers, inducing phenotypes comparable with those resulting from direct heat exposure, but utilizing distinct molecular pathways. Group-exposing a nonlaboratory zebrafish line, we independently confirm that the glycosaminoglycan biosynthesis–related gene chs1 and the mucus glycoprotein gene prg4a, functionally connected to the candidate stress metabolite classes sugars and phosphocholine, are differentially expressed in receivers. This hints at the production of Schreckstoff-like cues in receivers, leading to further stress propagation within groups, which may have ecological and animal welfare implications for aquatic populations in a changing climate
Thermal stress induces a positive phenotypic and molecular feedback loop in zebrafish embryos
Aquatic organisms must cope with both rising and rapidly changing temperatures. These thermal changes can affect numerous traits, from molecular to ecological scales. Biotic stressors are already known to induce the release of chemical cues which trigger behavioural responses in other individuals. In this study, we infer whether fluctuating temperature, as an abiotic stressor, may similarly induce stress-like responses in individuals not directly exposed to the stressor. To test this hypothesis, zebrafish (Danio rerio) embryos were exposed for 24 h to fluctuating thermal stress, to medium in which another embryo was thermally stressed before (“stress medium”), and to a combination of these. Growth, behaviour, expression of molecular markers, and of whole-embryo cortisol were used to characterise the thermal stress response and its propagation between embryos. Both fluctuating high temperature and stress medium significantly accelerated development, by shifting stressed embryos from segmentation to pharyngula stages, and altered embryonic activity. Importantly, we found that the expression of sulfide:quinone oxidoreductase (SQOR), the antioxidant gene SOD1, and of interleukin-1β (IL-1β) were significantly altered by stress medium. This study illustrates the existence of positive thermal stress feedback loops in zebrafish embryos where heat stress can induce stress-like responses in conspecifics, but which might operate via different molecular pathways. If similar effects also occur under less severe heat stress regimes, this mechanism may be relevant in natural settings as well
Behavioural stress propagation in benthic invertebrates caused by acute pH drop-induced metabolites
Studies on pH stress in marine animals typically focus on direct or species-specific aspects. We here test the hypothesis that a drop to pH = 7.6 indirectly affects the intra- and interspecific interactions of benthic invertebrates by means of chemical communication. We recorded fitness-relevant behaviours of small hermit crabs Diogenes pugilator, green shore crabs Carcinus maenas, and harbour ragworms Hediste diversicolor in response to short-term pH drop, and to putative stress metabolites released by conspecifics or gilt-head sea bream Sparus aurata during 30 minutes of acute pH drop. Not only did acute pH drop itself impair time to find a food cue in small hermit crabs and burrowing in harbour ragworms, but similar effects were observed under exposure to pH drop-induced stress metabolites. Stress metabolites from S. aurata, but not its regular control metabolites, also induced avoidance responses in all recipient species. Here, we confirm that a short-term abrupt pH drop, an abiotic stressor, has the capacity to trigger the release of metabolites which induce behavioural responses in conspecific and heterospecific individuals, which can be interpreted as a behavioural cost. Our findings that stress responses can be indirectly propagated through means of chemical communication warrant further research to confirm the effect size of the behavioural impairments caused by stress metabolites and to characterise their chemical nature
Functional genomics of abiotic environmental adaptation in lacertid lizards and other vertebrates
Understanding the genomic basis of adaptation to different abiotic
environments is important in the context of climate change and resulting
short-term environmental fluctuations. Using functional and comparative
genomics approaches, we here investigated whether signatures of genomic
adaptation to a set of environmental parameters are concentrated in
specific subsets of genes and functions in lacertid lizards and other
vertebrates. We first identify 200 genes with signatures of positive
diversifying selection from transcriptomes of 24 species of lacertid
lizards and demonstrate their involvement in physiological and
morphological adaptations to climate. To understand how functionally
similar these genes are to previously predicted candidate functions for
climate adaptation and to compare them with other vertebrate species, we
then performed a meta-analysis of 1,100 genes under selection obtained
from -omics studies in vertebrate species adapted to different abiotic
factors. We found that the vertebrate gene set formed a tightly
connected interactome, which was to 23% enriched in previously
predicted functions of adaptation to climate, and to a large part (18%)
involved in organismal stress response. We found a much higher degree of
identical genes being repeatedly selected among different animal groups
(43.6%), and of functional similarity and post-translational
modifications than expected by chance, and no clear functional division
between genes used for ectotherm and endotherm physiological strategies.
In total, 171 out of 200 genes of Lacertidae were part of this network.
These results highlight an important role of a comparatively small set
of genes and their functions in environmental adaptation and narrow the
set of candidate pathways and markers to be used in future research on
adaptation and stress response related to climate change